Since April 2018, T-Mobile and Sprint, two of the four major wireless carriers at the time, were seeking approval for a merger to combine the two companies into one. On April 1, 2020, the merger was completed, creating the New T-Mobile, now the second-largest carrier after Verizon
T-Mobile/Sprint Merger Timeline
T-Mobile originally announced the merger to the public in April 2018, it was approved by the Justice Department in July 2019, a federal court ruled in favor of the merger in February 2020, and it was finalized on April 1, 2020.
As of right now, the brands aren’t quite a fully united company. Eventually, everything from Sprint will move over to T-Mobile, but the process is ongoing. Sprint users don’t need to change anything about their plan, but they still need to access their account, manage their plan, and pay their bills on Sprint’s website.
Although the deal is said to create new jobs, lower prices, and provide better overall cell coverage, there’s still much speculation over how it will actually play out for customers and employees. Will the merger raise or lower prices? Will more jobs be created with a merge or does combining into one company force some employees out the door?
The Main Goal: 5G Implementation
While those things are definitely an important factor to weigh when it comes to a merger of any two companies, this one is primarily focused on accelerating 5G implementation. Both T-Mobile and Sprint users can access 5G right now, so long as 5G is available where you are. But, does uniting into one company mean 5G will come even faster…or slower?
Will Prices Change?
In 2020, T-Mobile said the merger means current customers could pay less than they do right now:
The Connecting Heroes Initiative
The company also says the merger will allow for free 5G access through Connecting Heroes Initiative, which is:
T-Mobile Connect
T-Mobile Connect is one change that was made around the time of the merger. There are four tiers you can pick from, the lowest being $10 /month for 1 GB of data and limited talk and text, and the highest option being $35 /month for 12 GB of data and unlimited talk/text.
What Else Will Happen?
Like with any merging of companies, the T-Mobile and Sprint merger means both companies have more resources than they did before when they were separate entities. We can expect this to translate to accelerated growth in terms of new devices and coverage, but it might not happen right away.
T-Mobile says that by 2026, the new company will:
However, from a customer’s point of view, it’s likely that not much is going to change. After some important behind-the-scenes factors are ironed out, Sprint users will be able to use T-Mobile cell towers and T-Mobile users will be able to reach Sprint towers. This means more coverage and likely little to no change in price (at least not higher prices) for existing customers.
Jobs Expansion
The companies have also said that with the merger, they plan to create thousands of new jobs in America. Some or most of these new employees would presumably be hired in rural areas where they plan to widen their infrastructure.
Unfortunately, it’s been the opposite. According to Light Reading in early 2021, several thousand jobs disappeared since the merger.
Effects on Coverage and Cell Tower Numbers
After the merger, the company’s then-current, combined cell tower count of 110,000 towers was reduced to 85,000. This involved building 10,000 new towers and cutting 35,000 towers. At the same time, the company plans to increase its small cell tower count from 10,000 to 50,000.
During that change, it’s unclear how that will affect coverage for existing Sprint and T-Mobile customers, since most if not all the decommissioned towers will be ones Sprint owned.
Dish Changes
Another change coming out of the Sprint and T-Mobile merger involves positioning Dish as the fourth major carrier in the US, essentially taking Sprint’s place. According to the Justice Department:
Dish’s 5G service started in Las Vegas in 2022, and expanded to more than 120 cities by mid-2022. They’re committed to building a 5G network by 2023 that will be available to 70 percent of the US population at download speeds of at least 35 Mbps. In fact, if they don’t follow through, they must pay the government a $2.2 billion penalty.
Even Sooner 5G?
Essentially all wireless carriers in the US have a 5G network somewhere, but it’s mainly situated in bigger cities. T-Mobile’s angle is to reach rural areas with decently fast, but not ultra-fast, 5G speeds.
However, if 5G is as important to T-Mobile and Sprint as they make it out to be, it’s very possible that their customers could see 5G rollouts appear in some areas sooner than Verizon’s or AT&T’s. Just look at this early 2019 filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission, where T-Mobile claims that with Sprint, the two companies could cover nearly 96 percent of rural America by 2024.
With more money, employees, and other resources, and a revamp of their cell towers, it’s not unrealistic to think that the new T-Mobile company is now in the fast lane to 5G and will beat out the other two major wireless carriers.
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